Politics › Re: Buhari At Opening Of Business For Africa, Egypt (photos) by LRNZH(m): 9:56am On Feb 20, 2016 |
Baba receiving business lectures with all seriousness. Kemi, your oga go soon know economics pass you o.
This man is undoubtedly dedicated. |
Politics › Re: Nigerian Troops Intensify Operations Against Boko Haram (photos) by LRNZH(m): 9:47am On Feb 20, 2016 |
Great news |
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Business › Re: Many Companies Will Start Closing Shop Due To CBN Forex Policy – MAN by LRNZH(m): 9:32am On Feb 20, 2016*. Modified: 9:53am On Feb 20, 2016 |
What are these items that are essential raw materials? Let's hear what they are. |
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Politics › Re: Lagos-kano Rail To Generate 250,000 Job Openings, Says Amaechi by LRNZH(m): 6:51am On Feb 20, 2016 |
Focus and implementation are key. I believe you honorable minister. |
Business › Re: The Naira In 2016: To Devalue Or Not To Devalue? by LRNZH(op): 6:42am On Feb 20, 2016 |
OrlandoOwoh: Nice piece! You brought to my memory the days of Prof. Ogbimi's TPD in OAU, Ile-Ife. I don't really know him/her but he/she does not agree with SAP policies judging from his/her works. Thanks for enlightening me.
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Business › Re: The Naira In 2016: To Devalue Or Not To Devalue? by LRNZH(op): 6:19am On Feb 20, 2016 |
mrphysics: @op you have really done a nice work. I love the way you unbiasedly pen down your point. From the past to where we are today, and from different governments.
Do you think that the cause of this current economic situation of Nigeria is caused by the present administration please give with reasons why the previous administration didn't experience the high exchange rate. Just for the benefit of some wailing Wailers in NL. because I know the answers. thanks I appreciate your praise.
Posts on an earlier thread by Obiagelli yesterday have IMHO, addressed this issue. Any interested person can visit link https://www.nairaland.com/2944595/what-exactly-go-wrong-cbn#43073171 |
Business › Re: The Naira In 2016: To Devalue Or Not To Devalue? by LRNZH(op): 6:07am On Feb 20, 2016 |
praxisnetworks: Modath scammed me preaching $1 to 1 Naira. But to think of it, 1N to $1 is not necessarily an economic advantage especially if we want to boost exports in the future. Read the OP. |
Business › Re: The Naira In 2016: To Devalue Or Not To Devalue? by LRNZH(op): 6:04am On Feb 20, 2016 |
989900: -- Henry Boyo. I have 3 other topics on devaluation; you can read them. Devaluation, is a cosmetic solution, or symptomatic solution if you will, to an underlying cause -- especially in our case -- where are our exports?!
It's like taking paracetamol for stage 4 cancer, and hoping that cures! We have an endemic problem here y'all! I agree. as you may have read in the OP, parallel markets are mostly not helpful. True as well. Devaluation is a means to an end but we are not in the situation to gain from it presently. |
Business › Re: The Naira In 2016: To Devalue Or Not To Devalue? by LRNZH(op): 6:00am On Feb 20, 2016 |
praxisnetworks: If you're not a trained economist then shetop.
I hate being scammed. Lol! You have been scammed a long time ago. |
Politics › Re: Sheriff: Jonathan’s Loyalists Threaten To Dump PDP by LRNZH(op): 5:51am On Feb 20, 2016 |
ignore
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Business › The Naira In 2016: To Devalue Or Not To Devalue? by LRNZH(op): 5:36am On Feb 20, 2016 |
IntroFirst, I am not a trained economist but I believe that as a widely read and travelled Nigerian, I know enough to generate and add to a discourse that is rather too pertinent to the current clime irrespective of academic training. Also, I am more of an empiricist than a theorist. This gives me the privilege to discuss issues outside of my discipline of expertise so long as I have some experience in the matter at hand.. We all of different professional, political, religious affiliations live, drink and eat the economy. I would give examples from existing economies to make my points rather than harp on theories taught in Business schools and Economics-101 classes. [img] http://qzprod.files./2015/12/nigerian-naira.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=1600[/img] Reuters/Joe PenneyProblem Definition and Analysis Today, the Naira officially exchanges to a US Dollar at 199.02, pegged by the CBN. A scan through the unofficial (black) market value of the US Dollar is between 330 to 400 N depending on where you are in Nigeria. A disparity of over 70% between both rates is definitely an alarming premium. In parallel (dual) foreign-exchange markets which are extremely common in developing countries (Nigeria is one, surprise!), a market-determined exchange rate coexists with one or more pegged exchange rates.
Countries resort to pegging their official rates and allow a parallel floating (i.e. black market) rate for reasons ranging from a. Protecting International Reserves (like Nigeria is doing today); b. Managing severe Balance of Payments (BOP) crisis. Countries use BOP to monitor all international monetary transactions at a specific period of time. Simply put, if a country has received money, this is known as a credit, and if a country has paid or given money, the transaction is counted as a debit. Theoretically, the BOP should be zero, meaning that assets (credits) and liabilities (debits) should balance, but in practice this is rarely the case. Thus, the BOP can tell the observer if a country has a deficit or a surplus and from which part of the economy the discrepancies are caused.(1); and c. Manage Inflation especially where there is significance dependence on importation of foreign goods. (This is largely what PMB and his advisors were thinking when the Buhari administration says it does not want to 'destroy the Naira' by devaluation).
In summary, parallel exchange rates are more likely to be adopted when economic performance of a country is bad. Another problem is determining of the right parallel exchange rate, because evidence indicates that macroeconomic fundaments (such as fiscal deficit, credit policies, and so on) matter most but does not protect from round-tripping by the privileged few as the rate premiums are usually large.
A 1994 World Bank research(2) of 8 parallel market case-studies (in Argentina, Ghana, Mexico, Sudan, Tanzania, Turkey, Venezuela, and Zambia), disappointing experiences. Most of these countries tolerated high premiums for long periods, which harmed the allocation of resources and growth. In most cases, it leads to selling of foreign exchange rate where a few rent seekers with access to forex at official rates thereby harming the allocation of resources and growth. Other studies have also not shown parallel markets to help economies that practise them on the long run.
Most countries tolerated high premiums for long periods without clear gains. In Nigeria's case, the first documented case of parallel market was in 1980 under Shagari's administration when the Naira officially exchanged at 55 kobo to 1 USD and at 90 kobo in the floating market(3). This practice was brief and abated only to return in 1985 under Babangida's regime at rates of 90 kobo to 1 USD officially and 1.7 N to a USD at the floating market. This is at an abhorrent premium of almost 90%.
Babangida, after forcefully taking over power in August 1985, accepted IMF and World Bank's precondition for borrowing. This is the famous Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP). In a recent expose blog-post by Eloho Omame(4), the economic issues that lead to SAP include 70% oil prices crash to below $10 per barrel and a 75% fall in government revenues between 1980 and 1986, an (officially) overvalued Naira and struggling non-oil sector. This sounds like 2015 to me when Goodluck Jonathan handed over power after his electoral loss to Buhari.
SAP's was meant to promote a floating exchange rate, encourage privatisation of government enterprise and relax import restriction carried from the previous Buhari regime. Inflation due to exchange rate relaxation was to be managed by tight fiscal policies.
Suffice to say by the time Babangida handed over power (8 years after the introduction of SAP), to the interim government of Shonekan in 1993, the Naira had been officially devalued to about 17 N to 1 USD while the parallel market was at 22 N to 1 USD. The parallel market premium was at an acceptable 30%. This is the only fond memory from Nigeria's journey through SAP. Some historians claim that the first couple of SAP year's witnessed a brief return to economic growth, increased net exportation, manufacturing and agrarian activities.
SAP is better remembered for the erosion middle class due to very slow per capita income (mostly salaries) while the Naira devaluation continuously. The perceived high level of corruption under Babangida's regime further worsened the reception of SAP inflicted pains. Ghana and Zambia also implemented SAP to only see underwhelming benefits. Depending on which schools of thought you belong to, SAP is a good programme that suffered due to poor implementation; or is a bitter unnecessary pill forced down the throats of desperate African countries by the Bretton-Woods 'neocolonialists' (see Ogbimi's thesis, 5). The jury is still out on this.
So far, we have elucidated two key points in the problem definition, that 1. Parallel Markets arise mostly from the unwillingness of governments to devalue their local currencies in times of recession. This usually ends up being detrimental to such economies on the long run. 2. Where free-fall devaluation has been allowed to happen (e.g. under SAP), it does not necessarily bring economic succour to .affected countries. So, the million-naira question remains. To devalue the Naira further in 2016 or not to?A very good example of how to use currency devaluation and indeed undervaluation comes from China. China is regarded to have the largest and most complex economy in the world for most of the past two thousand years, during which it has seen cycles of prosperity and decline(6). My emphasis would be on the ongoing rise of the Red Dragon since 1978. Based on general consensus, the drivers for this rise are: 1. Starting from 1978, Deng Xiaoping liberalised the economy without changing the political system. China pursued capitalism with a communist political system unlike Russia that wanted to control resource distribution through Perestroika and Glasnost. For example, China had over 100 Billionaires by 2009 compared to about 30 in India in a Communist set-up(7). 2. China's brand of capitalism is heavily state supported. State owned enterprises were and are still encouraged carry out business locally and internationally. A run-through of 2014 Forbes or Fortune-500 list of 10 largest companies in China will produce mostly state-owned enterprises like Sinopec (Oil), China National Petroleum (Oil), State Grid Corporation of China (Power), Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd (Banking), China Shenhua Energy Company Limited (Mining) amongst others(8 ). 3. China invested massively in physical infrastructure. A good illustration is in railways. With only 55,000 km of railways in 1985, China had a smaller rail network than India (62,000 km). By 2006, with 75,000 km of railways, China had overtaken India which had 64,000 km. In 2006, as a proportion of GDP, Chinese annual investment of 14.4 per cent in infrastructure such as power, transport, drinking water, irrigation and telecom was almost three times that of India(7). 4. Cheap, educated labour. This led to foreign companies to tap rush into China to take advantage of readily trainable human power. After the US, China is the second-largest recipient of Foreign Direct Investment in the world. Much of Chinese exports are by foreign-owned firms. In 2007, only four of China's top 25 exporters were Chinese companies 5. Lest I forget, as China started reaping from its investments in economic growth, it became hard-lined against corruption. As a communist country that doesn't have the ability to vote the corrupt officials out of office it had to devise its own rule of law to tackle corruption. In the1980s, "economic crimes" such as bribery, drug-trafficking, and embezzlement were added to the legal code for capital punishment. In fact, it is popularly stated that after the clampdown on corruption in China in the late 2000s, the sale of luxury watches (a popular gift to officials), dropped in China and Hong-Kong. (10,11) 6. Finally and most important to this discourse, China's exchange rate policy was designed to promote competitiveness. The renminbi (or yuan), which had been rapidly devalued from RMB 1.50 per US dollar in 1980 to RMB 8.62 per US dollar by 1994, was pegged at RMB 8.27 per US dollar from 1997 to 2005. By 2005, the renminbi was allowed to float and it gradually appreciated to RMB 6.82 in May 2009, and remained more or less unchanged thereafter. China has intervened heavily to prevent the renminbi from appreciating, and in the process, accumulated over $2.2 trillion by 2009 (9). The last point above shows that currency devaluation can be a driver for economic growth unlike the same continued devaluation with SAP in Africa. The difference in economic impact lies in the rest of the 4 points that I have highlighted and I will bring the points home to Nigeria. A Solution Nigeria would be right to scrap it's parallel market system and shift to a managed float system to encourage export if we had put in motion the right and effective policies to diversify our economy in the times of trade surplus especially between 2010 and 2014 as shown in the figure below (driven by >80USD/barrel oil price, 10):
www.nairaland.com/attachments/3420658_screenshot20160219at20_59_56_pngb62f23ed3800e5f9eff623d3419bd2f1
Clearly this diversification of the economy did not significantly happen under Jonathan's administration. Political pundits may want to paint a different picture but we know the painful truth.
This takes us to corruption. This is a flogged issue but the point to be made here is Nigerians have to support the current anti-corruption efforts no matter whose ox is gored. Corruption is the major reason Nigeria did not take advantage of the various surpluses in its history. When funds meant for infrastructural development and to support private enterprise are stolen by public officials, all policy planning efforts are useless.
In essence, in the short term, due to the aforementioned lack of economy diversification in Nigeria, I support the current Naira pegging by the Buhari administration but only for a little while (in my head, 2-3 years seem right). This is to allow the government enough time to increase power generation and transmission capacity by at least 4,000 MW (very aggressive but doable), revamp local refining capacity, and restore functional railways and road network system. Steel production is a must (Ajaokuta, dry bones must rise again). Farmers have to be encouraged. Too much food is wasted in the time of harvest due to lack of farm to market and storage capacities. All of his should include both public and private enterprise in this development. Foreign borrowing is allowed to achieve the outlined, so long as the terms are not enslaving or will not deviate Nigeria from the charted course.
All these, coupled with a hopefully non-existent insurgency in the North-East or Niger Delta by the end of the next couple of years, which have been major drains on Nigeria's hard earned foreign exchange earnings, should herald a new a phase where we can promote an economy ripe for export by devaluing the Naira and scrapping parallel markets, with increased local manufacturing and sufficient refining. We have to scrap foreign exchange parallel market sooner than later. Nigeria's long history with parallel market has not been favourable.
Again, for this dream to actualise, corruption must be fought to a standstill. No compromises. Before the parallel markets are scrapped, any body with access to officially sourced USD must have no affiliation with any Bureau De Change. Harsh punishments must be put in place against offenders. The standard of education- technical and commercial have to be addressed especially if we want to encourage foreign business to outsource jobs down to Nigeria. FDI's importance cannot be overemphasized.
There is hope. The controversial 2016 budget is meant to increase Capital expenditure like never experienced before in Nigeria (30% of the total budget). But, corruption took over immediately . Buhari is wrestling to regain ownership of the budget from the various parastatals as we discuss. Also, we may be in the worst year of oil price fall and Naira depreciation in the parallel market. It takes discipline to hold steady to laid out plans and strategy because it will only get better in a couple of years.
The onus on us as citizens is to support our leaders so long as they stick to the agreed path no matter how difficult or palatable.
Note that I have refused to discuss longer term solutions like resource control determination and fiscal decentralisation. These would be a topics of future debate(s).
Nigeria will be great again. Thanks for your patience. - LRNZH References:(1). http://www.investopedia.com/articles/03/060403.asp#ixzz40cyLSRcN (2). http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1994/03/698538/parallel-exchange-rates-developing-countries-lessons-eight-case-studies(3). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerian_naira(4). http://blogs.premiumtimesng.com/171189-2/(5). http://web.mit.edu/africantech/www/articles/PlanningAdjust.htm(6). http://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED460052(7). http://business.rediff.com/column/2009/nov/23/guest-reasons-behind-the-rise-of-china.htm(8 ). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_Chinese_companies(9). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renminbi(10). http://www.tradingeconomics.com/nigeria/balance-of-trade(11). http://www.bbc.com/news/business-23541923(12). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_China |
Business › Re: What Exactly Will Go Wrong If The CBN Floods The Economy With Dollars? by LRNZH(m): 6:57pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
989900:
CBN's faulty monetary policies are worse than fall in oil prices. Read my last 3 topics and follow the links, Boyo explained it better.
The CBN is a criminal enterprise!
http://www.opinionnigeria.com/sensible-path-to-stronger-naira-and-economic-prosperity-by-henry-boyo/#sthash.hyWWsaT0.eJNNE8Wx.dpbs Go to youtube, watch Boyo rip apart one of CBN's deputy governor on Channels.
You cannot ignore the impact of oil price crash on an economy like Nigeria's. Russia, Venezuela, Iran, Saudi Arabia are all going through economic times as a result of this. I understand your point. Whatever CBN has been doing good or bad, Nigeria could get away with it under GEJ because of unprecedented oil prices. Now, we can't |
Business › Re: What Exactly Will Go Wrong If The CBN Floods The Economy With Dollars? by LRNZH(m): 6:47pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
Obiagelli: But the CBN still manage to pay state governments in naira, do they just print naira or equivalent of our earnings [b]Even when FG's forex earnings drop, their overhead usually does not. FG has to pay salaries and keep all arms of government functional. This is a reason why governments devalue their local currencies. Say FG was earning 100B USD and it drops to 50B USD, by devaluing the local currency the 50B USD will have more local value and probably meet the local demands that the 100B USD was satisfying. The problem is that for an import-based economy, if you devalue so much to satisfy government spending, it reduces how much can be imported. This can lead to a food crisis for example. This, I believe, is part of what PMB's government is seeking to avoid. Devaluation is more beneficial to export based economies because the price of their commodity becomes cheaper internationally thereby stifling competitors. This is part of the Chinese strategy and it worked for them. They pegged the Remnibi at a lower than appropriate floating rate to fuel exports. That is partly why Chinese goods are relatively cheaper than goods from other countries. I suspect the PMB government is hoping oil prices will recover sooner than later and reduce the pressure on Naira, since CBN will have more USD to spread around while his government diversifies the economy by increasing power supply, loan accessibility, reducing imports by fixing refineries. Another drain on our Forex is the war in the NE. We keep spending forex to 'buy' weapons to fight the insurgency. PMB came at the most unfortunate time. But tough times bring out tough leaders.[/b] |
Business › Re: What Exactly Will Go Wrong If The CBN Floods The Economy With Dollars? by LRNZH(m): 6:33pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
CBN does not have enough Dollars to 'flood' the markets. One of the reasons for the restriction on forex sales to certain importers. Problem with over reliance on a commodity. Once the commodity price tanks, forex earnings plummet.
This is the short of it.
That is why economies are diversified in times of plenty and surplus earnings saved. This obviously did not happen when oil price was in excess of 80 USD/barrel under GEJ. Sorry I had to bring up Jonathan. It is what it is. |
Politics › Re: Opposition To PDP Chairman Ali Modu Sherif Have No Legitimate Case Against Him by LRNZH(m): 6:01pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
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Politics › Re: Opposition To PDP Chairman Ali Modu Sherif Have No Legitimate Case Against Him by LRNZH(m): 5:37pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
modath: It is not about arguing substance, the "Bala" error is common & it is made by people who assume he should be called Bala without necessarily being aware of the difference...
Stop throwing stones from your glass house & leave that thing about common sense ish, no matter how much you wash it, dress it, perfume it...SAS gave Boko Haram wings to fly, but like a bird, he could rein it in..
I'm done with this dead end issue abeg, and as I always insist you have your ways of doing your things, as the wind blows, keep at it & more grease to your elbows... Peace out!! Tonyebarcanista has never come across that name Mala until your correction (@ modath). Therefore, when he saw Bala Kachalla which was a mistake by another blogger (probably Joe Ndukwe), he swallowed it hook-line and sinker.
See Ndukwe's article where the Bala error originated. Then see Tonyebarcanista article where he repeated the mistake 4 times. If it looks, walks and quacks like a duck.... It is not a sheep. Plagiarism gone wrong.
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Politics › Re: Opposition To PDP Chairman Ali Modu Sherif Have No Legitimate Case Against Him by LRNZH(m): 5:17pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
PRYCE: You did not answer my question oo! The first priority is to militarily stop the insurgency, rebuild the North East while prosecuting the sponsors. You know how long it takes to prosecute a 'big man' in Nigeria. Currently the judiciary in Nigeria is not even helping matters. I do not expect them to be prosecuting people in court while the NE burns.
If your house is on fire, you first put out the fire before you go to break the head of the arsonist.
Like I told you, this government is still in its infancy. After 4 years we can have a more meaningful discussion. |
Politics › Re: Opposition To PDP Chairman Ali Modu Sherif Have No Legitimate Case Against Him by LRNZH(m): 5:12pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
TonyeBarcanista: I don't think EFcc is the agency that is to handle BH issues. We have NIA and DSS that does that. If Buhari government or anybody feels that SAS has a link with BH, nothin stops them from approaching the Police, DSS or NIA. Nothin stops them from approaching military authorities and the office of the NSA. I don't see how they need to wait for sequence of event from EFCC to do what is appropriate. EFCC, NIA, DSS. It does not matter. You have to launder money to sponsor terrorism if not you cannot cover your tracks.That my friend, is financial crime besides treason.PRYCE: I appreciate your answer too! But tell me who's gonna "cry foul" over SAS's prosecution if there is evidence? We are talking about terrorism here and NO Nigerian PDP or otherwise, even born of a savage that has witnessed the sects activities spanning 7 years now will tell me that he doesn't pray the sponsors of boko haram are caught... Fed grenades and blown away... let alone prosecuted in a court, inder Air conditioning and all. You've seen stalwarts of the PDP reject him... FFK even saying he founded boko haram... Believe me, NO ONE'S GONNA MISS SAS WHEN HE'S GONE. Secondly, which takes precedence? Stopping Boko Haram(ensuring security) or nailing looters? THE 'change' gov't led by the APC has a senator with terrorism charges hanging over his head as its majority leader... Which takes precedence please When SAS is called for questioning tomorrow, you and OP will be the first to cry foul about with-hunt of PDP Chairman. have not seen you guys supported that Tompolo should show up before EFCC to answer allegations of massive contract inflation? |
Politics › Re: Opposition To PDP Chairman Ali Modu Sherif Have No Legitimate Case Against Him by LRNZH(m): 5:07pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
modath: Barca you referred to Mala Kachallah as Bala yesterday cos you don't know the background story, you get 95% of your info from the Internet (you can't ever be 100% sure of the source or veracity) & run with it...
Like I advised you yesterday, look for real life maiduguri /Kanuri (like you should try to for other stories as well not just blog links) folks to give you better insight into this issue.... TonyeBarcanista actually lifted the ideas for that article and even that typo-error from another article on the internet. I just did not want to bring it up. See for yourself:
Jude Ndukwe- Ali Modu Sheriff as PDP Chairman: A Blessing or a Curse?http://www.thebreakingtimes.com/exclusive-ali-modu-sheriff-as-pdp-chairman-a-blessing-or-a-curse-by-jude-ndukwe/
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Politics › Re: Opposition To PDP Chairman Ali Modu Sherif Have No Legitimate Case Against Him by LRNZH(m): 4:54pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
PRYCE: Oga why is the 'change' government not after SAS since going by your recent convoluted analysis, there's substantial evidence to nail him to the wall?
Or is this gov't only after those involved in financial crime? Cos if this gov't only recognises 'Yam eaters' as the corrupt, then STEALING AIN'T CORRUPTION!!!
Please give a candid answer and don't junket around the bush... Peace!
I appreciate your question.
The few they have gone after, it was your type that came out to protest and cry witch-hunt. Left for PDP supporters, no one with a PDP memership card should be investigated or interrogated. You people forget that out of the 17 years in the current, 4th Republic, PDP reigned supreme for 16 of those years. What has Nigeria to show for it? Suffering.
But, I bet you that in four-years time we should have this discussion again. A lot of these goons with plenty question-marks hanging on their past lives will be brought to book.
EFCC started with Dasukigate, movng to Haliburton scandal and oil industry. Boko Haram sponsors will have their days in court at some point. There is just too much wrong with Nigeria. |
Politics › Re: Opposition To PDP Chairman Ali Modu Sherif Have No Legitimate Case Against Him by LRNZH(m): 3:48pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
OP. You cannot swear by anything that you are very sure that SAS (Sheriff) has not sponsored Boko Haram activities. Think about the gravity of your write-up which is based on opinions gained from rummaging the internet.
In the event that you are wrong, you have unwittingly elevated and defended the same cause that the Islamic fundamentalists in the North East have been proselytising. You should be intelligent enough to know that there is a formidable chance that SAS is a Boko Haram sponsor.
I leave you with this to ponder. If there are ears, let them hear, brains, let them think. |
Politics › Re: Uganda Elections: Picture Of A Ugandan Policeman Running Away With A Ballot Box by LRNZH(m): 2:11pm On Feb 19, 2016 |
Was Baba Iyabo there? |
Politics › Re: PMB Appointed Tolu Ogunlesi As His Special Assistant On Digital/new Media by LRNZH(m): 7:01pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
Effective Appointment |
Politics › Re: Why Sheriff Is A Wrong Candidate – Doyin Okupe by LRNZH(m): 5:19pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
TonyeBarcanista: As APC loyalist, you should be happy if you believe that Sheriff candidacy is off-key. Abi ?
As for Ribadu, I'd have love him to but he wasn't interested. Perhaps, his sight is on the Presidential ticket.
For Muazu, hahaahahaha On the face of it, APC loyalists should be happy. PDP has shot itself in the foot no doubt.
But no. This is stooping too low. If the allegations against SAS are even renotely true, then we have just glorified a killer of many thousands innocent kives. We also want a formidable opposition to keep the ruling party on their toes. It so for the betterment of Nigeria. SAS cannot make PDP formidable.
Muazu is a progressive by nature. That's why he didn't jive with GEJs ineffectual campaign in 2014/2015. If PDP wanted to reform itself, the likes of Muazu, Nnamani, Ribadu are supposed to be running things and not SAS, Metuh, Wike, Fayose.
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Politics › Re: Why Sheriff Is A Wrong Candidate – Doyin Okupe by LRNZH(m): 4:50pm On Feb 18, 2016*. Modified: 5:19pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
hinwazaka: It doesn't matter who is picked as the chairman, as long as it ends with an Okonji Iweala presidential ticket. Kontinu living in your weed phantasmagoria.
1. PDP has zoned the 2019 presidential ticket to the North. 2. Learn to spell her name correctly for once. It is Okonjo-Iweala. |
Politics › Re: Why Sheriff Is A Wrong Candidate – Doyin Okupe by LRNZH(m): 4:33pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
TonyeBarcanista: Doyin and GEJ loyalists want Gulak. I'm not against Gulak(if you check) but I don't see this contest as a must win. SAS has already emerged, it's either Doyin and co accept the fact or they should go to hell!
PDP doesn't belong to ex-GEJ's aides alone. Of course nobody in the majority wants SAS. SAS is way richer than Gulak hence he is the party chairman today. PDP didn't care about the BH sponsor baggage he carries with him. It is a shame if you ask me.
Muazu or Ribadu are much more reputable than SAS. I have told you before, SAS is hated by the masses in Borno state because of his (past and present?) BH affiliations. |
Politics › Re: BREAKING: Chris Ngige Collapses At National Assembly by LRNZH(m): 4:15pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
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Politics › Re: Ali-Modu Sheriff: Allegations of Boko Haram Connection (What the Records Say) by LRNZH(op): 3:15pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
orisa37: AMS Is too much engrossed in Controversy. The Move forward for PDP may become messier. By the way, where is Ribadu? Has he been abducted? Which party is Prof. Jibril Aminu, the Senator and where is he too? It was in the news that Ribadu disappeared when PDP was looking for someone from the NE to name as chairman. I guess Ribadu didn't want to be stained.
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Politics › Re: Ibrahim Magu With The IStandWithBuhari Rally Group (Photos) by LRNZH(m): 2:13pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
LRNZH: Check yourself and be honest with the answer you will provide to this question. Between Magu and Marilyn Orgar. Who would you rate as having a more professional and less partisan approach with their duties? This is a litmus test my friend. MCMLXXVI: Stop aimlessly shifting the goal post. Both rose to head institutions critical to the country's correctional/security welfare. Magu is here shameless dancing with lackeys. Do you expect such a man to ever have the balls to prosecute a Buhari loyalist after this? Do you still wonder why the same man shamelessly LIED that he hadn't received any petitions against Amaechi? At this juncture, I can't help you anymore. You have diplomatically avoided my question. |
Politics › Re: Ibrahim Magu With The IStandWithBuhari Rally Group (Photos) by LRNZH(m): 2:06pm On Feb 18, 2016 |
MCMLXXVI: His job is to stand with the COUNTRY, NOT his BOSS, for his boss is but a man. His allegiance is to the INSTITUTION. Stop letting your silly partisan sentiments blind you.
You people complained when Marilyn Ogar did all she did. Why are you suddenly blind to the impunity under this government? Check yourself and be honest with the answer you will provide to this question.
Between Magu and Marilyn Orgar. Who would you rate as having a more professional and less partisan approach with their duties? This is a litmus test my friend. |